What is new for Northwoods Drifter in 2026


Picture this: You’re standing in your local library, and suddenly you’re face-to-face with a woolly mammoth skull. A man dressed in furs demonstrates how your ancestors hunted these giants 15,000 years ago — right here in Wisconsin. It’s not a movie set. It’s the work of Sean Sullivan, better known as the Mammoth Hunter.
Based out of Wausau, Sullivan runs a traveling museum that’s been captivating audiences across the state for nearly eight years. His mission? To make the Stone Age feel less like ancient history and more like a shared family story that connects every single one of us.
Sullivan didn’t set out to become Wisconsin’s go-to Ice Age expert. About eight years back, he visited a Wausau museum and offered to build a couple artifact reproductions. One presentation turned into dozens, and before he knew it, he was booking 60 events annually.
“I kind of fell into it,” Sullivan admits with the humble tone of someone who stumbled onto their calling.
What makes his approach unique is experiential archaeology — a hands-on method where he doesn’t just show artifacts, he uses them. Every spear, hide scraper, and bone flute in his collection is something he’s crafted based on archaeological evidence. Then he puts them to work, testing how our ancestors actually lived.

The centerpiece of Sullivan’s presentation is a recreation of an actual woolly mammoth hunt that happened in Wisconsin nearly 15,000 years ago. Archaeological sites like the Schaefer Mammoth site near Kenosha prove that Paleo-Indians really did take down these massive creatures in our state.
Sullivan walks audiences through the entire experience:
After the presentation, audiences get what Sullivan calls the best part: they can handle everything. Kids grip stone-tipped spears. Parents snap photos with their little ones next to predator skulls. Teenagers test out atlatls — the spear-throwing tools that gave hunters serious range.
You might wonder why Ice Age education resonates so deeply in the Northwoods. The answer is literally beneath our feet.
Those kettle lakes you fish on? Carved by retreating glaciers. The moraines and ridges shaping our forests? Left behind when the ice finally melted. The Northwoods landscape is a living museum of the Ice Age, and Sullivan’s programs help us see it with fresh eyes.
“Every single person on earth has an ancestor that survived the Stone Age using these types of tools and technologies, facing off against these giant predators for food and for safety, sitting by the fire at night trying to stay warm. It’s the shared beginning of all of us.”
Sullivan’s tours regularly reach Northwoods schools, libraries, and community centers in Vilas, Oneida, and Forest counties. For rural communities where heritage tourism intersects with outdoor recreation, these programs add another dimension to how we understand where we live.

Sullivan has noticed patterns after hundreds of presentations. Young boys typically gravitate toward the spears and hunting weapons. Girls are drawn to the musical instruments — bone flutes and drums that prove our ancestors didn’t just survive, they created art and culture.
Parents? They’re all about those photo ops with giant predator skulls.
But the real magic happens when someone in the audience shares a piece of knowledge Sullivan hasn’t encountered yet. “I love being able to share my knowledge,” he says, “and I sometimes even bump into people who know little bits that I haven’t learned yet and learn from them as well.”
That two-way street — where educator and audience both learn — is what keeps Sullivan booking events across Wisconsin year after year.
After pausing during the pandemic, Sullivan resumed tours in 2022 and saw immediate demand. He recently scaled back bookings after his daughter was born, but plans to return to full scheduling soon.
His programs blend anthropology, archaeology, and STEM education in ways that work for all ages. Whether it’s a school assembly, library event, or community gathering, Sullivan adapts the experience to fit the venue and audience.
For Northwoods communities looking to add educational programming that actually engages kids (and adults), the Mammoth Hunter offers something you can’t get from a textbook or documentary. It’s tangible. It’s local. And it reminds us that 15,000 years isn’t really that long ago when you’re holding the same type of tool your ancestors used.

The glaciers that shaped our lakes and forests are long gone, but their story — and ours — lives on in every arrowhead found along the shoreline, every ancient campsite uncovered by spring floods. Sullivan’s just making sure we don’t forget how to read those stories.
Interested in bringing the Ice Age to your town? You can reach out through Sullivan’s website to book a program that’ll have your community talking long after the last mammoth skull gets packed away.
Written by
Mike has been coming up or living in the Northwoods since his childhood. He is also an avid outdoorsman, writer and supper club aficionado.
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